What’s wrong with boasting? A four-character idiom

1. The four-character idiom of "what to say, what to say"

If you say too much, you will miss the meaning, if you say too much, you will be wrong, if you say what you want, what you say, what you say, what you mean, etc.

1. Words cannot fully express the meaning

Explanation: The feelings are tortuous and profound, and words cannot fully express them. It is often used at the end of a letter to indicate that what was said did not fully convey the meaning.

From: "Book of Changes·Xici": "Books cannot fully express words, and words cannot fully convey meanings."

Translation: Words cannot fully express words, and words cannot express fully the intentions.

2. If you talk too much, you will make mistakes.

Explanation: If you talk too much, you will definitely make mistakes.

From: "Guiguzi·Benjingfu": "If you talk too much, there will definitely be shortcomings."

Translation: If you talk too much, there will definitely be mistakes.

3. Confirmation

Explanation: Confirmation: true. The description is very precise.

From: Qing Dynasty Pu Songling's "Liao Zhai Zhiyi·Duan": "What is said is conclusive and credible."

Translation: What is said is very conclusive and credible. evidence.

4. Listen and obey.

Explanation: Listen: obey. He listens to everything he says and adopts every idea. Describes having great trust in someone.

From: Sima Qian·Western Han Dynasty's "Historical Records·Biography of the Marquis of Huaiyin": "The King of Han granted me the seal of general, gave me tens of thousands of people, undressed me, fed me, fed me, and listened to his plans, so I am able to get here."

Translation: The king of Han gave me the seal of the general, gave me tens of thousands of horses, undressed me, fed me, and followed his advice, so I was able to get here. .

5. Implication

Explanation: It means that there is this meaning, but it is not stated clearly in the words.

From: Song Dynasty Ouyang Xiu's "Six One Poetry Talk": "One must be able to describe a scene that is difficult to describe, as it is now, with endless meanings, which can be seen beyond the words, and then it is complete."

Translation: You must be able to describe the scene that is difficult to describe, as if it is in front of you, with endless meaning, it can be seen beyond the words, and then it arrives. 2. Which idioms are not four-character idioms?

There are many non-four-character idioms in the 90,000-entry vocabulary library that comes with the Multiple Input Method (Multiple Chinese Characters and Graphic Symbols Input Method). For example:

The three-character idiom is stupid; wearing a high hat; struggling with passwords; shielding; fishing for straw; fishing for a handful; wrestling; somersaulting; throwing away the pick; propping up the facade; Optimus Prime;….

Five-character idioms: It takes a little effort; it is passed down from generation to generation; it is twisted into a rope; to catch the thief first, catch the king; to hide the truth from the superior, not from the inferior; every particle is hard work; the smoked seeds are not the same; the earthworms shake the big trees;… ….

Six-character idioms: A movement is worse than a stillness; a couple cannot be tied up; a woman cannot let her husband live; one cannot live in fear; it is easy to catch a tiger, but difficult to control it; rotten wood cannot be carved; ants are greedy for life; a donkey's lips are not as good as a horse's mouth ;…….

A seven-character idiom cannot be slapped; one person can do something for another; young ginger is not as spicy as old ginger; the prime minister's belly can punt; it is difficult to plant delicious cherries; a sparrow knows the ambition of a swan; tie a tiger It is easy to control a tiger, but difficult to control; an arm cannot twist a thigh;...

Idioms with eight characters and above: one is willing to be beaten, and the other is willing to suffer; one person is fighting for his life, but ten thousand men are not worthy of it; a gentle lady, a gentleman is fond of fighting; a mantis stalks a cicada, while an oriole follows behind; a snipe and a clam vie with each other, but the fisherman wins. Profit; the mantis stalks the cicada, but does it know that the oriole is behind? Xingxing cherishes Xingxing, and a talented man cherishes a talented man; a horse can take risks, but it can't plow the fields as well as an ox; the speed of a horse cannot be achieved by the strength of one foot;... 3. The four-character idiom "yan is right"

"Yan is right and the person is wrong" means that the words are blameless, but the behavior is not acceptable.

Other idioms containing words:

Thin lips and soft words describe talkative and casual speaking.

Have a glass of wine and talk happily. Get together to drink and chat happily.

Keep your mouth shut and say nothing.

Coins are worth words and words are sweet. Gifts are generous and words are nice. Refers to the temptation to use wealth in order to achieve a certain purpose.

Words that change one's complexion. Mostly refers to words spoken impulsively and in anger over a dispute over the merits.

Ice charcoal does not say anything, but coldness and heat are self-evident. It is a metaphor that inner sincerity does not need to be expressed, but must be expressed in actions.

Learned Debate: Many. Hear: hearsay. Argument: clever words. Describe hearsay and specious remarks.

Smiling and unsmiling Gou: Tolerate, casually. Don't joke casually. Describes a solemn and serious attitude.

Unspeakable refers to something that cannot be described in words.

It’s beyond words. Describing very much or reaching the extreme.

Ineffable declaration: speech; declaration: publication, expression. Refers to something that cannot be expressed in words (used to talk about the mystery and taste of things).

Ineffable: explain, inform. Words cannot explain it.

Ineffable: to describe; to describe. There are no words to describe it.

Don’t care about what others say. Don’t care about what others think. It means that no matter what others say, you should still do what you want.

Believe without saying anything. It used to mean that a gentleman can gain the trust of others without saying anything.

Describes the high prestige of Chonghai, Uncle Fen, and Jiao Fengxie.

Self-evident: understand, understand. You can understand without speaking. The description is obvious.

Don’t waste words based on others. Waste: discard. Do not refuse to adopt the correct opinions of this person just because of his shortcomings.

Observe words and colors Observe: examine in detail. Observe what other people say or look on their faces. It refers to trying to figure out other people's thoughts.

Speak freely: freely, happily. Say everything you want to say freely.

Quiet and taciturn. He has a deep and quiet personality and doesn't like to talk much.

Silent: silent; silent: few. Quiet and rarely speaks.

Chen Yan Wu Go Chen Yan: obsolete words; Wu: must. Old words must be eliminated. It means that when writing, we should eliminate obsolete things and strive to create and innovate.

Cheng Jiayan refers to the fact that knowledge can form its own system and can be divided into factions.

To speak rudely: to be humble and polite. Speaking rudely.

The original meaning of "what you say becomes a rule" means that what you say becomes a standard. Later, it was often used to describe quick writing and thinking.

Talking without meaning, speaking impudently and impolitely.

Speak in an organized manner.

Dabian does not speak. Dabian: good at debating. People who are eloquent and good at debating don't talk much to show themselves off.

Speak big words without feeling embarrassed.

Frank words: fair speech; zhi: upright. Fair, honest, and justified speech.